David Cameron outlines the four major reform bills he will make his priority if he is handed the keys to Downing Street this week

Slideshow: David Cameron

Britain's opposition Conservative Party leader David Cameron addresses business leaders and students at a business centre in London April 19, 2010.

Photograph: Toby Melville

Sitting in the Old Mill Cafe in Chipping Norton, David Cameron insists there
are Labour supporters in his Oxfordshire constituency. “A lot of people were
moved here from Birmingham after the war,” he protests. “It used to be a
mill town, you know.”

Maybe so but there’s not a single Labour placard in its leafy lanes and, as he
tucks into a Saturday morning fry-up, the Conservative leader is greeted by
endless polite constituents, including a glamorous former newsreader,
wishing him good luck. There’s not a finger-jabbing pensioner in sight.

Sporting his trademark weekend wear of black jeans and navy V-neck, he looks
surprisingly well rested for a man about to face the toughest week of his
political career. He told me how it was good to have a night in his own home
and to potter around his garden with a coffee when he woke up.